Every Psychological Trap Explained in 13 Minutes

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  • Опубликовано: 31 май 2024
  • 38 Psychological Traps Explained in 13 Minutes

Комментарии • 589

  • @littlebitbetter7
    @littlebitbetter7  2 месяца назад +64

    I have summarized over 10 books on Psychology. See here if interested - ruclips.net/p/PLlbl0lCipVePj5kKkSKNk0gHsr7BECrx_&si=bKh4LnK-96FuEoHS

    • @13aware
      @13aware 18 дней назад

      Experience
      Meaningless: Experience and prejudice. To accept sight and illusion in the same relativity and not be a slave.
      Slavery: To be free from the growth of intellect. Experience free from understanding and memory as triviality.
      Memory: reduced down to recollection without review, in a universe of consistent physics; a triviality of organic invincibility. Experience rendered down to self-sensual recall without existential considerations; meaningless.
      Prejudice: to accept the delusion that no human can consider and choose. For experience to outweigh sense and sensible prudence and suggest in definite physicality that humanity is as inorganic as the constructs we purpose.
      Triviality to the concept of Slave, is Mass to Gravity, either one hypothetical without the physics of Trivialization or Mass. One requiring the circumstance of genesis, the other requiring absence of necessity; Nativitus Ancillae.
      Relativity: the universe revolves around you, but only if you watch with others; relativity born of tripartite geometry; self (observing), other (conferring), objective (occurring): co-intimate experience and co-context.
      Relativity: all things can happen to you, most didn't, you only know what you think, you only think what you can hypothesize, all understanding revolves around perception and interaction. Understanding and position; relative.
      Hypothesis: a proposition of a form unsensed in the physical, in the definition "scientific" it is the Fructus Ventris Physica Quantitatis; the guessable, potent in measurability, invisibilia ad carnalis, observationis codificationem.
      Hypothesis: a concept just beyond sensible observation but within sensory or facultative relativity to intimate comprehension; the space an observer feels safe to coniectura didicit doctrina. A cerebrum exercitium.
      Meaningless: the words of any personal exposition without the person. Interpretation of intended and intimate communication removed from its physical occurrence. To hypothesize in the spirit of Freud, all are I.
      Meaningless: a description of a building behind it's façade to a man on the street. Definition without sensible example; invisibility bestowed by the suggestibility of the potent potentiality of descriptionem alienum.
      Reference without experience, definition without context, experience without definition, definition without reference; to theorize on fancy, the possibilities of cause bereft of "scientific" prejudice towards provable.
      A description of the unseen to the comfortable in sense, and sensibility; hypothesis delivered socially by the
      perfecte mediocris to their perfecte mediocris aetatis. Interest and applause humilis, the sermo aequalis.
      Contemporary communication, external warehouse for internal deliberation. Deliberatio externa by contrast is built on extra-contemporary, the functional in sense and nerve unwilling to mal-hypothesize popularis prudentia.
      By definition a contemporary is both naturally occurring and actively intersecting, or it is a generational (illusory), built of temporal coincidence. Meaningless in contemporations intimate, capable of saying they share an age.
      Exogeny
      In an era of fear, humanity is tested. The exodus of existential loneliness is a heavy burden. Self-indulgent contemporary values, the pitiful death of the faithful gregarious martyr. Silenced in the passion of virtue, in the fury of desire as necessity, the ideal dies for the joy of man as the ideal devotee of nothing. Endogenous evidence of exogenous truth, derived from noble prejudiced purposes, refutes the pathologies of nature as the folly of prosaic and sensible sustainability. Euphoria at any cost, at any cost.
      The Addict Kind
      Lonliness is a myth spread by the ill, unwelled by popular delusion (self accepted).
      The sickly, pulsing out their (self) comforting radiance, the marking of a predators territory. A light to shine on all slow enough to not revile it for it's false and reason less eviction of self from capability.
      The prey; uninitiated youth, vulnerable innocence. Argue not with the aged (or experienced) self-convinced. The miracle of emotional conformation of physical fact convincing to the unknowing, under steady application, overly sweetened (for the self) ideals of pleasure and comfort, the prey forget they knew a peace that didn't requiring feeding or explanation.
      The virtue of falsely buoyed stability grinding the ignorant, young, and uncatered, all taken in by the sin of kindness as apex. To gift the sickness that tells a human "human emotion in the negative is unnecessary and beyond comprehension or tolerance".
      To know that there are those in the world of humanity, who in their generationally refined adherence to parasite coddling, will continue to teach the youth "drugs are a healthy and functional right of aware and intelligent people" is a mark of shame in this age of our collective development.
      The truth of human being betrayed by the proposed necessity of stimulation beyond the natural state, it's supposed normality vouchsafed; sobriety (health) ignored as a greater insanity than parasitism.
      Salve the wounded pride of the vulgar addict, crucify the outspoken advocate of reassessment. This is not a statement of conflict, rather a portrait of the true and natural order in it's biased equality (comfort belonging to those who crave it most).

  • @carterheekin1974
    @carterheekin1974 3 месяца назад +1173

    top 1% of extremely valuable information on RUclips.

    • @aripadreaptatherightwing6028
      @aripadreaptatherightwing6028 3 месяца назад +6

      Yes

    • @ThecouncilOf8
      @ThecouncilOf8 3 месяца назад +17

      I mean in the same sense that videos about logical fallacy are but then you get people committing the fallacy fallacy by the layman inaccurately identifying fallacies
      Knowledge is useful if you are humble enough to understand a 13-minute video doesn't make you an expert and dive deeper into reputable sources on the subject 😅 knowledge can be dangerous when used under the influence of arrogance

    • @leoGInnJago
      @leoGInnJago 3 месяца назад +16

      Wow 😮 you've have watched everything on RUclips and narrowed it down to the top 1%

    • @tigweldNY
      @tigweldNY 2 месяца назад

      Are you a bot?

    • @leoGInnJago
      @leoGInnJago 2 месяца назад

      @@tigweldNY are u?

  • @RashadTyrique
    @RashadTyrique 3 месяца назад +548

    I experienced “the curse of knowledge” while raising my son. I would get upset with him when he does certain things. Only later to understand that he doesn’t know the things I know and that he’s in the process of learning, so have patience and teach him right from wrong

    • @renaldsunset
      @renaldsunset 2 месяца назад +60

      Please work on that aspect of your personality as it has ruined my childhood and inflicted terrible wounds to my mental health that I’m still at 37 struggling to heal.

    • @thegovernor067
      @thegovernor067 2 месяца назад +6

      Agree ​@@renaldsunset

    • @thegovernor067
      @thegovernor067 2 месяца назад +1

      Same with my dad

    • @UCAP
      @UCAP 2 месяца назад +6

      imagine if all people understood this

    • @orlandovega6958
      @orlandovega6958 2 месяца назад +6

      My dad was the same way. I have unfortunately followed in his steps. First step is to acknowledge such behavior, second step is to correct it. Im currently working on my patience.

  • @brpragyanchaitanya9442
    @brpragyanchaitanya9442 2 месяца назад +105

    Psychological traps:
    1. Ostrich effect: When you ignore negative information just because it makes you nervous or anxious
    2. Inability to close doors: Fear of missing out. You continue to do something in spite of discomfort or loss. To overcome, Focus on one thing.
    3. Contrast effect: When you value something more because you have seen something worse. Or vise versa. To overcome this, evaluate things independently
    4. Chauffeur knowledge: Believing someone who acts smart, but is not wise actually, like a parrot. To overcome, Ask deeper questions
    5. IKEA effect: you value something more, just because you did it. To overcome, Get feedback.
    6. Curse of specificity: Giving unnecessarily more importance to an irrelevant information .
    7. Spotlight effect: Becoming anxious that thers are noticing you. Know that they are not interested in you.
    8. Halo effect: When your impression in one area effects your decision in other areas. Separate events.
    9. Reciprocity: Acting out of obligation.
    10. Self serving bias: You take responsibility of success but not of failure. Practice taking responsility.
    11. Diderot effect: One action leads to unnecessary other actions or spending like buying a car - Spiral effect. Be mindful.
    12. Anchoring effect: First option becomes very important for future comparison.
    13. Negativity bias: When you focus more on negatives. Consciously focus on positives
    14. Sunk cost fallacy: Keep doing something just because you invested in it. Focus on future returns instead.
    15. Paradox of choices: Inability to Choose because options are too many, like ordering from 50 dishes. Reduce and simplify
    16. Framing effect: Presentation influences your decision making. E.g. 90% chance of success vs 10% chance of failure.
    17. End of history illusion: Thinking who you (or they) are now is who you (or they) will ever be..
    18. Pygmalion effect: Reduced time improves performance.
    19. Consistency effect: Find someone who thinks you are accountable.
    20. Planning fallacy: Underestimate some task as easy. Do thorough homework instead.
    21. Confirmation bias: Notice things that you already believe. Challenge your own views instead.
    22. Bandwagon effect: Following the crowd. Respect your needs more.
    23. Dunning Kruger effect: Overestimating your own abilities. Consult experts insead.
    24. Loss aversion: Fear of failure overwhelms the chance of success.
    25. Decoy effect: Prefer a thing because its better than the worse. Choosing a medium popcorn because it seems cheaper than bigger one. Evaluate things on their own merit instead of comparing them with others.
    26. Availability heuristic: judge the likelihood of event based on how easily you remember them. Like news bombardment.
    27. Gamblers fallacy: Believe that Past events somehow effect future one. Like if you have lost 10 coin tosses, you are going to win the next one.
    28. Hindsight bias: I knew it attitude.
    29. Reactance bias: Tendency to do the opposite of what is told. Because obeying looks like a threat to my freedom.
    30. Action bias: Inability to wait and act hastily without information or preparation. Be patient instead.
    31. Survivorship bias: Only notice success and forget the efforts it takes. Research both sides
    32. Unity principle: Trust a person or product more because he is from your group or state or culture etc.
    33. Zeigarnik effect: Remember incomplete tasks more than the completed ones. Plan instead.
    34. Bystander effect: Not taking action and standing by. Be specific in asking and giving help.
    35. Ambiguity effect: Tendency to avoid choices that look unfamiliar.
    36. Curse of knowledge: Assuming that others know what you know without validation. Put yourself in their shoes instead.
    37. Illusion of averages: Illusion of believing that average numbers reveal truth. Dig deeper.
    38. Endowment effect: Valuing something just because you own them. See from an outsider perspective.

    • @aliamiri9403
      @aliamiri9403 Месяц назад +1

      I love you...

    • @Angelmations
      @Angelmations Месяц назад +1

      Bro she already talked about it in the video we don’t need this

    • @Sunny-pg3ek
      @Sunny-pg3ek 20 дней назад

      Thank you!

    • @aamonzan3006
      @aamonzan3006 10 дней назад

      @@Angelmations ye but most people cant remeber all of them so that is a helpful comment

    • @hkg2729
      @hkg2729 17 часов назад

      ❤❤❤

  • @edwong4178
    @edwong4178 3 месяца назад +408

    The top 5 cognitive biases of difficult people:
    1. Self-serving bias
    2. Negativity bias
    3. Confirmation bias
    4. Reactance bias
    5. Dunning-Kruger effect

    • @flix1179
      @flix1179 3 месяца назад +7

      its dunning kruger effect has a spoken from a ppl with dunning kruger effect, cause he think he know more than he actually know

    • @DreamingwithD
      @DreamingwithD 3 месяца назад

      End of the history for me

    • @plantinapot9169
      @plantinapot9169 3 месяца назад +5

      I remember the dining Kruger is actually misunderstood, but I can’t remember the specifics. I thing people thought the graph was more skewed than people made it out to be? Like, people who didn’t know much didn’t actually thing they were better, or something like that.

    • @plantinapot9169
      @plantinapot9169 3 месяца назад

      Less skewed, I mean

    • @lukasz_zalewski
      @lukasz_zalewski 3 месяца назад +2

      @@plantinapot9169basically dunning and Kruger dunning krugered themself because they have missused mathematic statistics tool and did double auto correlation or sth like that idk if I’m not messsing just specific terms. Basically you’d get same graph as they did using random data. No one ever proved this experiment. The graph that most people know was actually drawed to represent the idea but not based on data. Both experts and newbies over and underestimate their skills pretty the same.

  • @Westhe2nd
    @Westhe2nd 3 месяца назад +340

    I am immediately liking this simply bc you got right to the info instead of some long drawn out backstory

    • @IronicCrime
      @IronicCrime 2 месяца назад +2

      that's the contrast effect haha

  • @MarthaRodriguez-bn2wq
    @MarthaRodriguez-bn2wq 2 месяца назад +179

    Depression haunted my life from a very young age, and I was put on a bunch of SSRIs as a child in attempt to deal with it. None worked. Psychedelic mushrooms was brought to my attention. It was the first thing that actually had real effects. They should only be used with great care and respect.

    • @ConfusedAlbatross-kw9km
      @ConfusedAlbatross-kw9km 2 месяца назад +4

      I hear this is supposed to be good for people who have mental health issues. I actually just started the research process of microdosing and all that. Im to the point where I want shock treatment.

    • @StacyBridwell-ez2tu
      @StacyBridwell-ez2tu 2 месяца назад +7

      dr.johnsonshroom is your guy. Got all kinds of psychedelics stuff. Guided me through my first ever experience

    • @ReneeTorres-ey5ud
      @ReneeTorres-ey5ud 2 месяца назад +1

      Psychedelics should only be used with great care and respect, I would love to feel same man. 0:01

    • @MikeLatin
      @MikeLatin 2 месяца назад

      ​@@StacyBridwell-ez2tuOkay is he on insta?

    • @JerryKson
      @JerryKson 2 месяца назад +6

      YES, he is dr.johnsonshroom. There's a lot of
      potential in psychedelics

  • @user-dm8nr9ih1n
    @user-dm8nr9ih1n 3 месяца назад +91

    The actual reason why I find such videos helpful is it brings awareness to what things exist which pique my interest so that I can research aabout them deeper later.

    • @6-Silent-0-Killer-7
      @6-Silent-0-Killer-7 2 месяца назад

      Their all merely a excuse to not be a adult and productive member of society and take accountability for their own life happiness success and even sadness lables are a joke you give something a lable they believe in it they become it becoming a even fucken sloth and say I can’t help it I have smear shit on walls disorder ahH man alright my bad bro sorry to hear that I personally have I believe anything g people tells me disorder

    • @lucasasselmeier7825
      @lucasasselmeier7825 7 дней назад

      I find the simplicity of the ideas enough, if one just thinks on them

  • @MMLanoue
    @MMLanoue 3 месяца назад +90

    I did not know that I had a psychological trap until now. Sunk Cost Fallacy, this may have helped me change my perspective in life. Thank you

    • @beewest5704
      @beewest5704 3 месяца назад +17

      Very common especially amongst women. It's why they will stay for years in a unhappy relationship that is going nowhere. Also gamblers.

    • @camoflasche
      @camoflasche 2 месяца назад

      also video game addicts (i know myself)@@beewest5704

    • @meganoob12
      @meganoob12 Месяц назад +1

      I think that one is very common and most people will fall for it regularly.
      It's when you think "I want to quit but I have already invested too much so it's scary to make the decision because I will lose everything I worked for so hard".

  • @pussinboots9983
    @pussinboots9983 3 месяца назад +35

    "Have a nice day!"
    "Enjoy your 24 hours!"
    Framing effect be like

  • @littlebitbetter7
    @littlebitbetter7  3 месяца назад +130

    Hi Guys, I just wanted to give a shoutout to The Paint Explainer channel for the inspiration behind this video. Not totally sure if they're the pioneers of this style of videos, but it's important to give credit where it's due, right? Hope it was a useful video.

    • @Abhishek.Rana.
      @Abhishek.Rana. 3 месяца назад +4

      👏👏

    • @MultiTinyboo
      @MultiTinyboo 3 месяца назад +3

      Did you do the drawing?

    • @Dwiggytv-OG
      @Dwiggytv-OG 3 месяца назад +6

      Why copy their style at all though? You're a book summary channel-... Stick to that...?

    • @ForrestThoreau
      @ForrestThoreau 3 месяца назад +2

      Improvement Pill is the first channel with this style I ever saw nearly a decade ago. No idea if they were the first though.

    • @nonamewhatsoever3615
      @nonamewhatsoever3615 3 месяца назад +2

      ​@@ForrestThoreau the paint explainer may not be the first but the guy popularized it

  • @smokedoutmotions_
    @smokedoutmotions_ 2 месяца назад +16

    Why didn’t we learn these in school

    • @Gued3s
      @Gued3s Месяц назад

      Because the school dont teach psicology education

    • @SweetBabyRey
      @SweetBabyRey 26 дней назад

      I thought that and to be honest I think that's the parents responsibility. The thing people say about why didn't school teach us about taxes. I think all that stuff is a parents responsibility

    • @zc1312
      @zc1312 17 дней назад

      This is actually important life information… I sure wish I learned it in school, or from parents. But that would require way more work from a school system or parents to be able to teach non-biased information that they themselves barely even understand but is experiencing everyday.

  • @eeaotly
    @eeaotly 3 месяца назад +55

    The ostrich effect is when you ignore the uncomfortable information that the ostrich bird doesn't burry its head in the soil/sand, and you continue to believe this expression as stating the truth.

    • @drivers99
      @drivers99 3 месяца назад +24

      The “taking things literally” effect.

    • @5stringking
      @5stringking 2 месяца назад +5

      A consistent liberal bias

    • @JDoe001
      @JDoe001 2 месяца назад +3

      The pooooooooooooooooooooooooiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinnnnnnnnnnnnnnnt! ☝🏻↗️😮(the point went over the head)

    • @joelanderson5285
      @joelanderson5285 2 месяца назад +1

      They do lower their heads, which looks like they are burying their head from some angles.

  • @E44792
    @E44792 2 месяца назад +14

    videos like this is why youtube is best platform out there. bless all the people sharing free information like this

  • @skeletor127
    @skeletor127 2 месяца назад +6

    That one negative comment. What that guy is wearing, where he lives, what he looks like, where he went to school, etc is all irrelevant.

  • @SharkFish18
    @SharkFish18 2 месяца назад +24

    Study this video everyday! Truly valuable information, well explained and straight to the point.

  • @hurlicane56
    @hurlicane56 3 месяца назад +28

    This should be required viewing for every human being.

  • @Illustratedinformationcenter
    @Illustratedinformationcenter 3 месяца назад +24

    The insights shared here are eye-opening! Recognizing the ostrich effect in myself, and understanding how the contrast effect, Ikea effect, and other biases impact decision-making, is truly enlightening. It's a powerful reminder to approach choices with awareness and to seek objective perspectives. Thanks for shedding light on these psychological principles!

  • @chaelum2666
    @chaelum2666 2 месяца назад +4

    0:00 1. Ostrich effect
    0:19 2. Inability to close doors
    0:41 3. Contrast effect
    1:01 4. Chauffeur knowledge
    1:18 5. IKEA effect
    1:36 6. Curse of specificity
    2:24 7. Spotlight effect
    2:39 8. Halo effect
    2:55 9. Reciprocity
    3:09 10. Self-serving bias
    3:26 11. Diderot effect
    3:43 12. Anchoring effect
    4:02 13. Negativity bias
    4:44 14. Sunk cost fallacy
    5:08 15. Paradox of choice
    5:30 16. Framing effect
    5:57 17. The end of history illusion
    6:12 18. Pygmalion effect
    6:31 19. Consistency principle
    6:47 20. Planning fallacy
    7:00 21. Confirmation bias
    7:19 22. Bandwagon effect
    7:34 23. Dunning-Kruger effect
    7:49 24. Loss aversion
    8:02 25. Decoy effect
    8:23 26. Availability heuristic
    8:42 27. Gambler's fallacy
    9:02 28. Hindsight bias
    9:13 29. Reactance bias
    9:31 30. Action bias
    9:50 31. Survivorship bias
    10:16 32. Unity principle
    10:33 33. Zeigarnik effect
    11:02 34. Bystander effect
    11:25 35. Ambiguity effect
    11:50 36. Curse of knowledge
    12:11 37. Illusion of averages
    12:41 38. Endowment effect
    Js dropping this here in case somebody else needs it. Great video, very informative ❤

    • @throughthoroughthought8064
      @throughthoroughthought8064 Месяц назад

      Thank for the list. (Some need renamed, such as "Zeigarnik effect." Others I can guess the meaning to.)

  • @chrismichael9556
    @chrismichael9556 3 месяца назад +9

    Should probably go figure out why your daughter is screaming 😱.

    • @jamesdewane1642
      @jamesdewane1642 2 месяца назад +1

      She made that up, too.

    • @kimberlee9858
      @kimberlee9858 2 дня назад

      You must be the one negative comment she alludes to.

  • @luv4svn
    @luv4svn 4 дня назад

    Bro u literally cleansed my energy and made me feel happy again today😭😭 your energy its so refreshing and your so blunt. Im a sag so i live for it. I broke a generational curse and im a psychic/reader myself and girl god awakened me ⭐🙏🏾. I have a strong feeling and i just know my mom was one of the main ones foing witchcraft on me. Such a Narc, abusive, loves to see me suffer. Yesterday was the last straw ive been abused by her for 21 years. Mentally, physically, spiritually, emotionally. My life has been living hell and im just now reclaiming my power back. I just came back from the hospital yesterday due to malnutrition and rapid weight loss bc of her bm. She was draining me energetically and stressing me and monitoring me in her house. I have been homeless since 17 (she kicked ne out still in HS) im 21 now and im about rent my first house.

  • @MrG__2
    @MrG__2 3 месяца назад +34

    Your last two videos have been invaluable! The concise and informative content re: psychology and cognitive biases all in one place is appreciated. Keep it up!

  • @eskilerin_kalitesi1127
    @eskilerin_kalitesi1127 3 месяца назад +24

    Loved the concise concept of this video.
    I can quickly recall the things that I learned from your other videos. Great content.

  • @chalneleytusent6790
    @chalneleytusent6790 3 месяца назад +10

    I have been listening to your videos for a week now. The amount of knowledge I have adquiere it amazes me each day. Thank you thank you for sharing this!!

  • @sarcasmm
    @sarcasmm 3 месяца назад +18

    this kind of compilation are really great and saves more time and effort.
    thank you making such videos.

  • @RebeccaLoran
    @RebeccaLoran 6 дней назад

    There's a ton of these types of videos popping up on my feed lately and it's kinda helpful. I'm autistic, and understanding various social/psychological/manipulation/etc can really help me out.

  • @_..-.._..-.._
    @_..-.._..-.._ 3 месяца назад +13

    The survivorship bias wasn’t explained quite right imo.

    • @yaboisartre5844
      @yaboisartre5844 2 месяца назад +4

      She’s gonna remember this

    • @kelechi_77
      @kelechi_77 2 месяца назад

      Many of them weren’t explained well but thats what happens when you go through so much info in 13 minutes

    • @kellyfesler2578
      @kellyfesler2578 2 месяца назад

      Sounds like a negative bias

  • @rpgprime
    @rpgprime 2 месяца назад +1

    The spotlight effect is one of my favorites. People don’t think about you the way that you think about you.

  • @Allittakesiswillpower8371
    @Allittakesiswillpower8371 3 месяца назад +9

    I have no words for your valuable videos
    I Just ❤❤❤ all of them.

  • @dmtdreamz7706
    @dmtdreamz7706 2 месяца назад +1

    Finally you reach the question of death. What is death? You smile and laugh as you realize that death is just something you’re imagining. You are now too conscious to die. An Infinite Mind cannot die because it’d have to imagine its own non-existence. An Infinite Mind has nowhere to go, being already in all times and places.

  • @HipHopWorldStar
    @HipHopWorldStar 2 месяца назад +1

    At one point, I was studying 8 languages at once. Made insignificant progress. Wish I knew about “inability to close doors” earlier.

  • @kbraxton45
    @kbraxton45 2 месяца назад +2

    I wish more people would embrace the Confirmation Effect ~

  • @matone4374
    @matone4374 3 месяца назад

    I love how this video popped up today when in 3 days i have a midterm on exactly this stuff . So helpful

  • @katisugarbaker7349
    @katisugarbaker7349 2 месяца назад +2

    Here’s another psychological trap : thinking you “NEED” to do something because a RUclips video creator says “…you need to…”.

  • @juliantreidiii
    @juliantreidiii 2 месяца назад +2

    The Ikea effect is basically the same thing as the sunk cost fallacy. The curse of specificity just like the pressured sale effect annoys me and makes me much less likely to want to have anything to do with you. While I do have a little bit of the negativity bias and the reactive bias used to affect me The curse of knowledge is the only one of these that actually holds on to me.

    • @pong9000
      @pong9000 2 месяца назад

      Maybe more to the IKEA Effect. Because it's well known in sales that if you can make the customer handle a product they're far more likely to purchase it.

  • @michaeld2716
    @michaeld2716 3 месяца назад +3

    I heard the opposite regarding the Consistency Affect. So I tend to keep stuff under wraps.

    • @g.i.4144
      @g.i.4144 2 месяца назад

      I’ve experienced the opposite and do the same as you keeping things under wraps myself….I get more things done that way bc I’m the only person holding myself to account and I feel less pressure to yield results as time goes by. Telling other ppl creates an invisible pressure of now needing to live up to the stated goal, and if the right circumstances to enable success with that goal are not yet in place, I find myself quickly feeling like a failure.

  • @zc1312
    @zc1312 17 дней назад

    Zooming out, the reason why this information isn’t more widely known/taught is because this is literally how a lot of industries use these as psychological tactics to make more profit (in my experience/opinion).

  • @pulkitgupta5277
    @pulkitgupta5277 18 дней назад

    00:02 Recognize and counter psychological traps
    01:38 Psychological traps include curse of specificity, spotlight effect, halo effect, reciprocity, and self-serving bias.
    03:23 Take responsibility and avoid psychological traps
    05:05 Psychological traps affect decision-making
    06:42 Accountability enhances commitment to goals
    08:10 Avoid common psychological traps
    09:53 Bias and psychological traps affect decision-making.
    11:31 Evaluate ambiguous choices and avoid the curse of knowledge, illusion of averages, and endowment effect.

  • @King-yj2jx
    @King-yj2jx 2 месяца назад +1

    This video has cured all the debuffs life put on me.

  • @blackiscolor7732
    @blackiscolor7732 2 месяца назад +1

    I can relate each and every one of these to either myself or someone I know directly

  • @natantitelbaum6061
    @natantitelbaum6061 3 месяца назад +1

    4:56 Investment Bias describes it better.
    Thank you Alexander Grace.

  • @joannefitzpatrick992
    @joannefitzpatrick992 2 месяца назад

    Some parents don't just memorize a few phrases to repeat them over and over, they know that to teach and to learn are often the same verb in the other language, and so they learn and grow with their kids, and listen.

  • @cedricbillingsley3960
    @cedricbillingsley3960 2 месяца назад +1

    This is useful info worthy of being duplicated, remixed, reformatted, and generally repeated ad infinitum by multiple channels. This one is top notch for it's succintness.🎉🌹🌹🌹

  • @Azaqa
    @Azaqa 2 месяца назад

    The other thing that's less mentioned with Dunning-Kruger effect is that it not only means people with little knowledge believe they're an expert but also that the experts believe they're less informed than they actually are

  • @jackso_28
    @jackso_28 2 месяца назад

    The inability to close doors has been my curse for a long time now due to my determination and willingness to want to get myself into a better position. I become obsessed with work and will put all other aspects of my life on hold just to work as much as possible..

  • @edjwise
    @edjwise 3 месяца назад +4

    My new favorite channel, thanks for your content!

  • @-redacted-
    @-redacted- 3 месяца назад +1

    Her getting agressive at the end about no space on the shelf for old clothes sounded a little personal lol.

  • @untilgta6ix
    @untilgta6ix 3 месяца назад +1

    The first 10 seconds already punched my ego

  • @muhkula
    @muhkula 2 месяца назад

    The single most important thing I learned about people is that they are not primarily trying to succeed but to not fail.

  • @randhyLeksu7288
    @randhyLeksu7288 6 дней назад

    that spotlight effect were planted into my brain by my mom, the worst person who'll look every thing i did, break in to my social media accounts, stalk me with my friends and how i behave just to find a hole to shout me at home. j have trust issues someone's watching me all the time and use it against me

  • @KitKatHexe
    @KitKatHexe 2 месяца назад +1

    On negativity bias: imagine addinga small amount of vinegar to a drink. It may be only a tiny fraction of the whole volume, but it has ruined the beverage. In contrast imagine adding a small amount of that same drink to a glass full of vinegar. It's not going to suddenly become palatable.
    Negativity draws more attention, because the brain has developed to latch onto things it percieves as threats, either mental or physical, and attempt to evade them.
    The issue in your given example us that the brain is under threat to its concept of self worth, and the avenue that threat manifests through is the very attention the brain gives all threats.

  • @brightpage1020
    @brightpage1020 2 месяца назад

    I thought the 1st 1 would be: fear, obligation, or guilt… or gaslighting. This was helpful. Thank you.

  • @gablison
    @gablison 3 месяца назад +2

    I find if I tell people what I'm going to do I'm less likely to do it and more likely to put it off until later because the act of telling someone feels like a first step while if I just hunkered down and did the thing I'd build up momentum because I started doing the thing and not telling some I'd do the thing. It's like if I just ruminate on a problem in my head I'd go around in circles never solving it but once I tell someone about it, it's out of my head but still in a jumbled mess, it's not until I right it down that I can sort it out into something that makes sense.

    • @AlaricVonRiesen
      @AlaricVonRiesen 3 месяца назад +1

      none of these solutions are absolute answers. but they are very helpful advice. I feel the same way, I have had good results working out, never really talking to anyone about it, but I have achieved good results I also wouldn't plan my days in advance, but the suggestions might work for a neuro-typical person.

    • @Ymch809
      @Ymch809 2 месяца назад +1

      I understand every word you are saying, it’s so embarrassing too because you end up saying a lot of things and by the end you don’t do any of them and the cycle continues

    • @Ymch809
      @Ymch809 2 месяца назад

      @@AlaricVonRiesenIve noticed this too it’s like if I jinxed myself lol I start making video diary saying I’ll be working out but never end up doing it, it goes better when I don’t say anything and dont make myself any promises

  • @mancheifer
    @mancheifer 2 месяца назад +1

    Thanks for teaching me about Loss Aversion. I think I’m ready to put my bank heist into full swing

  • @isaacludwig2568
    @isaacludwig2568 2 месяца назад

    added bonus: you can learn to detect lying by hearing the inflection in her voice when she tried to trick us.

  • @OTOSoundsandVisuals
    @OTOSoundsandVisuals 2 месяца назад

    I just learned about the spotlight effect like a week or two ago, and by understanding this, it has brought me abit of ease. I've been especially in tune with my emotions, and being perceived once I got sober, and man, it has been wild.

  • @MrofficialC
    @MrofficialC 2 месяца назад

    One thing I've learned is that if you have a thought in your head that you think is not good and you try to block it out that you will be left feeling like you only think negatively but if you let the thought fully come through and you think about it more then you might find that after thinking it through and letting your mind accept that it's true or false that you end up with a better result

  • @GODemon13
    @GODemon13 2 месяца назад +2

    You left out the other half of Dunning-Kruger effect. Where actually informed people tend to under estimate themselves because they know they might not have all the relevant information.

  • @User_Unknown_15
    @User_Unknown_15 9 дней назад

    Thank you so much for such valuable information and free education for people on RUclips. 🙏

  • @MoskusMoskiferus1611
    @MoskusMoskiferus1611 2 месяца назад

    I procrastinate my psychology assignment for tomorrow to watch this video

  • @vipinkumar6353
    @vipinkumar6353 3 месяца назад +1

    I think in most of these what I find common is that it wants us to deny our thinking, feeling and beliefs and act according to truth, logic and facts.
    That's why in religions like Buddhism where truth is of utmost importance, for ultimate reality to exist, mind has to be just like a mirror, reflecting what is without any distortion.
    You see in nature everything is truth, it's only the interpreter that creates lies and deception.

  • @hellokittysays6333
    @hellokittysays6333 3 месяца назад +2

    Unity principle could also be called in-group bias.

  • @fineas-em6iu
    @fineas-em6iu 2 месяца назад

    Negative Bias one was personal 😂

  • @jextra1313
    @jextra1313 3 месяца назад

    Negativity bias and loss aversion are just forms of confirmation bias, which is a natural resistance to changing your beliefs.

  • @44Nate_
    @44Nate_ 2 месяца назад +1

    I hate the spotlight effect, I work in an open kitchen and I hear customers voices in my head judging me/praising me all the time. It feels like mild schizophrenia that doesn’t really stop until I feel more comfortable in my surroundings. I just wanna live man but these thoughts don’t seem to go away. I think it’s just attention/approval seeking or something.

  • @user-mn4pb9xj8f
    @user-mn4pb9xj8f 3 месяца назад

    I’m 30 seconds in and I’m already talking to my phone like “ alright, take it easy there”

  • @HarryDale-yq2hq
    @HarryDale-yq2hq 2 месяца назад +1

    I feel extremely called out here

  • @yevihan
    @yevihan 2 месяца назад

    finally i can tell my mom why i always forget to close the bathroom door

  • @dozer0535
    @dozer0535 2 месяца назад +1

    4:20 go off queen‼️‼️ fuck that negative spirit, thank you for this video 🙏🏽🙏🏽 helpin us get out the maze

  • @aaronm7028
    @aaronm7028 2 месяца назад

    Don’t focus on the terms, focus on the “why” of the action. Focusing on the “why” gives you a better understanding of how the action happened and what the action is. Then you can use those “whys” in multiple parts of your life.

  • @rockoyhead4005
    @rockoyhead4005 2 месяца назад

    Making one video about all of these: ❌
    Making one video for each of these: ✅💲

  • @LB-hi6zc
    @LB-hi6zc 2 месяца назад

    All my bad habits articulated in one place😮

  • @mw2Ronaldinho
    @mw2Ronaldinho 3 месяца назад +2

    Close doors is pretty much the story of life😂

  • @1983toka
    @1983toka 2 месяца назад

    Appreciate your expectations about this topic 😊

  • @jussdoughjustin3893
    @jussdoughjustin3893 2 месяца назад +1

    pattern seems to be making specific , objective and independent choices after careful consideration 🤔. thank you ✌🏽

  • @tristindalton4238
    @tristindalton4238 2 месяца назад +1

    I'm hearing many different ways to describe a few behavior patterns

  • @m3t4ldood
    @m3t4ldood 3 месяца назад +1

    Shared on my FB this is the thing I tell people and they tell me I'm crazy thank you for helping me to navigate my own Battlefield

  • @kofatheballer5539
    @kofatheballer5539 3 месяца назад

    “That one guy sitting in his pajamas all day in his messy room with nothing else going on in his life”
    😅😔

  • @user-zh4dp6lc9m
    @user-zh4dp6lc9m 2 месяца назад

    We appreciate your explanation. You're very clear and straightforward with expressing your own insights.

  • @SonarTheBat
    @SonarTheBat 2 месяца назад

    Inability to close doors sounds like FOMO.

  • @Letslearnthechess
    @Letslearnthechess 2 месяца назад +8

    One of the best contents on youtube i have ever seen till date. One issue is it is too fast to understand and apply in life. Unfortunately it cant be solved. RUclips pushes long videos down.

  • @jextra1313
    @jextra1313 3 месяца назад

    The consistency principle is just that people don't like liars, it's not a trap.

  • @nickpelov
    @nickpelov 3 месяца назад +6

    👍nice one. I watched a similar one wihtout examples. examples make all the difference

  • @siliconalleys
    @siliconalleys 17 часов назад +1

    Nice presentation. However Realtor is pronounced real-tor. Not re-lator. Most people who are NOT in the real estate field make this mistake.
    Nonetheless, thanks for your video.

  • @kieunganguyen693
    @kieunganguyen693 2 месяца назад +1

    Very interesting video! So true, so helpful, yet so much information in so little time!
    My brain can’t process it all at once. I’ll need to come back to finish it later!

  • @KhonsurasBalancedWaytoWellness
    @KhonsurasBalancedWaytoWellness 3 месяца назад +2

    Ben Shapiro comes to mind with the chauffeur effect

  • @sarahkeller-vp6hq
    @sarahkeller-vp6hq 4 дня назад

    So, what if you credit success to luck and failures to yourself?

  • @Peaserist
    @Peaserist 2 месяца назад

    About the Ikea effect, what if I like the act of putting it together? It's not that I value the item because I built it, but rather, I value building stuff.

  •  2 месяца назад +1

    6:30 im the opposite. if i tell someone im about to do something im less likely to do it as i feel i already done some part to achieve it by talking it

  • @mchb84
    @mchb84 3 месяца назад +2

    Thanks for your video

  • @gwills9337
    @gwills9337 2 месяца назад

    How about the “armchair psychologist” effect: when you flippantly assume someone is committing a fallacy or demonstrable psychological bias- but you actually dont know what you’re talking about. 😂

    • @dsc_03
      @dsc_03 Месяц назад

      Negativity bias

  • @itsmeta4
    @itsmeta4 10 дней назад

    I really appreciate the work you put into your videos. Keep it up.

  • @Awesomes007
    @Awesomes007 3 месяца назад

    Could you please expand on the trap that involves devaluing the opinion of someone who has a messy room, is male, is in their pajamas, and is on their couch? Because that pretty much describes me, but I’m a pretty decent person who is stuck with long Covid and has those attributes. But I’m also very intelligent and caring, and an intellectual who cares about things like devaluing someone because they’re stuck in a chronic illness and have to interact with people on the Internet all day.

    • @user-qt8ch4bj3t
      @user-qt8ch4bj3t 2 месяца назад

      Ur stuck in a negativity bias bro

    • @jordan3649
      @jordan3649 2 месяца назад

      It's not you, she's using the example as a coping mechanism so she doesn't have to face negativity. She's not ready.

  • @World_EXP
    @World_EXP 2 месяца назад

    This video truly made a strong impression on me

  • @TheGronk
    @TheGronk 3 месяца назад +2

    thank you very much for explaining this all very clearly.

  • @laurabenigno5720
    @laurabenigno5720 3 месяца назад +5

    Thanks!

  • @veelee2156
    @veelee2156 Месяц назад

    I just subscribed to this channel yesterday. I find the info very valuable. Love the graphics helps retain the info. Also your voice is palatable to listen to. I can understand you clearly. Your summary’s are spot on in the sense that they make sense, flow well, concise and clear. This is a value added channel. Like getting the cliff notes to the best self help books. I listen in my car. I’m surprised how much I can actually retain. Keep up the good work. You’re doing great!!!

  • @marvinmaligro3563
    @marvinmaligro3563 3 месяца назад +2

    Can you also cover "GREAT CEO's ARE LAZY"? Thank you for the work you and your team do.

  • @iwans8386
    @iwans8386 3 месяца назад +1

    Top 3 videos I’ve ever watched on youtube. Thank you 🎉 Liked, shared, subscribed 😊

  • @tequalacraig62
    @tequalacraig62 2 месяца назад

    Here is 1 more positive comment to read. Thank you for this video 🙏. Helpful information, explained simply